HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

Cuuugi

340 karmajoined hace 12 años

comments

Cuuugi
·ayer·discuss
Different regions have different pricing unfortunately.

https://partner.steamgames.com/pricing/explorer?l=english&ut...
Cuuugi
·anteayer·discuss
The writers name is Maxwell Cooter, which made me giggle.
Cuuugi
·hace 2 meses·discuss
I drove on a road in the winter that apple maps thought was closed. It freaked out the entire way.

Software can make mistakes.

Google's TOS gives them immunity for these types of errors, just pay attention to road signs people ffs....
Cuuugi
·hace 3 meses·discuss
Im running a Beelink EQ15 + OpnSense to do something very similar.
Cuuugi
·hace 6 meses·discuss
The implication is that you are attacking the defenseless. There is none more defenseless than the dead.
Cuuugi
·hace 6 meses·discuss
The online world breeds extremism. It wasn't too long ago criticizing someone on their obituary was considered classless. This is the world we have made.
Cuuugi
·hace 9 meses·discuss
The full saga is humourous. from wiki.

Gary Larson cartoon incident

One of Gary Larson's Far Side cartoons shows two chimpanzees grooming. One finds a blonde human hair on the other and inquires, "Conducting a little more 'research' with that Jane Goodall tramp?"[114] Goodall herself was in Africa at the time. The Jane Goodall Institute thought the cartoon was in bad taste and had its lawyers draft a letter to Larson and his distribution syndicate in which they described the cartoon as an "atrocity". They were stymied by Goodall herself: when she returned and saw the cartoon, she stated that she found the cartoon amusing.[115]

Since then, all profits from sales of a shirt featuring this cartoon have gone to the Jane Goodall Institute. Goodall wrote a preface to The Far Side Gallery 5, detailing her version of the controversy, and the institute's letter was included next to the cartoon in the complete Far Side collection.[116] She praised Larson's creative ideas, which often compare and contrast the behaviour of humans and animals. In 1988, when Larson visited Goodall's research facility in Tanzania,[115] he was attacked by a chimpanzee named Frodo.